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To be kind, some of the products at the International Consumer Electronics Show here are a stretch, such as a belt that automatically expands when you sit down or eat too much. There hasn't been a lot of innovation in belt making in the last few hundred years, so the French-based firm that created this smart belt, Emotia, believes the public might be ready for something new.

It's surprising how little home intercoms have evolved considering how long they've been around. "When my wife and I were renovating our house, we wanted an intercom system to keep tabs on our three little boys," says Nucleus founder Jonathan Frankel. "But all the quotes came back above $3000 for the same technology mar parents installed 20 years ago."

CES is the best place to find outrageous TVs: OLED, 4K, curved, flat, smart, 100-inchers, you name it, some costing in the five-figure range. But if you poke around you can also find some TVs that make sense to normal consumers--TVs you can buy at Walmart.

Start 2015 with a bang: the sales start now! Ready to shop some more amazing bargains and find great savings on tech? We bring you the best January sales 2015 tech deals on phones, tablets, laptops and more in our Best UK tech deals live blog.

If you need another reason to consider smart glasses, Osterhout Design Group (ODG) has a pair that's not only full of high-definition augmented reality and virtual reality functions but has style and military cred too.

Home products that work with smart thermostat Nest are quickly becoming a cottage industry, but new washers and dryers from Whirlpool just might be the largest appliances that connect to Nest--literally.

Fuhu, the makers of the nabi tablets for kids, on Friday expanded further into the action camera line with the latest version of the nabi Square HD, a $169 cube that will probably remind you of the first-generation GoPro Hero.

Samsung's Milk VR video app, announced Tuesday, marks a tantalizing step forward for virtual reality. The app will let you run full-motion, 360-degree video on the Gear VR headset. Not a movie in a simulated theater environment, like we've seen with Oculus Cinema demos, but a video beamed right to your eyes, bringing VR users ever closer to a real-life experience.

Threats of violence may have scared off major theatre chains from showing The Interview, but thanks to its digital release, many viewers are still getting a chance to see the latest from Seth Rogen and James Franco.